The
museum holds a wide range of exhibits, from paintings to sculptures
to furniture to American Cultural objects. A special exhibition
will be open from through March 5, 2006, entitled: Slavery in
New York. The exhibition examines the little-known history of
enslaved New Yorkers. The Museum's Bernard and Irene Schwartz
Distinguished Speakers Series, running from October 2005 through
February 2006, includes fifteen lectures on different aspects
of slavery, including three that focus on women in the abolition
movement.

N2:
Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture

The Schomburg Center contains exhibits on all aspects of African
American heritage, including extensive information on the Underground
Railroad in the "Lest We Forget: The Triumph Over Slavery" exhibition.

N3:
The Hunt House

Location: 401 E. Main St., Waterloo, New York
**The
building is currently under renovation and is not open to the
public

Jane and Richard Hunt were active Quaker abolitionists who invested
and managed a factory that specialized in woolen textiles as a
boycott of slave-labor cotton. Their carriage house was used as
a station on the Underground Railroad. It was also at the Hunt
House that the idea for the Women's Rights Convention was conceived
and both Jane and Richard were signers of the women's Declaration
of Sentiments in 1848.

N4:
M'Clintock House Museum

Mary Ann and Thomas M'Clintock and their daughters Mary Ann and
Elizabeth were members of the Western New York Anti-Slavery Society.
Their home was a station on the Underground Railroad. The home is
also where women's rights leaders wrote their manifesto, the Declaration
of Sentiments. More information about Mary Ann M'Clintock can be
found in the Philadelphia site, Fair Hill Burial Ground.